The idea for a BEST (Boosting Engineering, Science,
and Technology) competition originated in 1993 when
two Texas Instruments (TI) engineers, Ted Mahler and
Steve Marum, were serving as guides for Engineering
Day at their company site in Sherman. Together with
a group of high school students, they watched a
video of freshmen building a robot in Woody Flowers'
class at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The
high school students were so interested that Ted and
Steve said, "Why don't we do this?"
With enthusiastic approval from TI management,
North Texas BEST was born. The first competition was
held in 1993 with 14 schools and 221 students
(including one team from San Antonio).
After learning that a San Antonio group had
formed a non-profit organization to support a BEST
event, North Texas BEST mentored them in providing a
BEST competition. Thus, San Antonio BEST, the second
BEST competition site (or "hub"), was started in
1994. The two groups - North Texas and San Antonio -
decided to meet for Texas BEST, a state playoff at
Howard Payne University in Brownwood, TX.
In 1995, more hubs were started as word spread:
Collin County BEST (Frisco, TX); West Texas BEST
(Texas Tech University in Lubbock); and Chicago
BEST. Also, that year, Texas BEST - the "state
championship" - became an annual event sponsored by
Texas Instruments and Texas A&M University.
In 1996, more new hubs came on-board: Brazos BEST
in Bryan, TX, and Dallas BEST. Denton County BEST
(Denton, TX), became the eighth hub in 1997. That
same year, BEST established itself as a non-profit,
501(c) organization.
Four more hubs joined in 1998: North Colorado
BEST (1998 and 1999 only); Oklahoma BEST (Oklahoma
Christian University in Oklahoma City); and
Northwest Arkansas BEST (University of
Arkansas-Fayetteville). In 1999, Kansas BEST
(Wichita State University), Space City BEST (Johnson
Space Center in Houston), Four Star BEST (now Five
Star) in Conroe, TX, and Cal-B BEST (University of
California-Berkeley, 1999 and 2000 only) were
started. Chicago BEST became Illinois BEST that same
year. A single new hub was formed in 2000: Kentucky
BEST (Western Kentucky University, since folded).
In 2001 BEST held its first New Hub Workshop at
Texas Instruments in Dallas. The following hubs were
started from that workshop: Alabama BEST at Auburn
University; New Mexico BEST at New Mexico State
University in Las Cruces; Cowtown BEST in Ft. Worth,
TX); and Capitol BEST in Austin, TX.
Heartland BEST at Northwest Oklahoma State
University in Alva was the lone new hub to join the
program in 2002. 2003 saw the rise of several new
hubs: River Valley BEST at the University of
Arkansas - Ft. Smith; Florida BEST, a part of the
Broward County School system in Ft. Lauderdale;
Georgia BEST at Southern Polytechnic State
University in Marietta; Bearcat BEST at the
University of Cincinnati, OH; and Tennessee Valley
BEST in Huntsville, AL.
Also in 2003, BEST's second regional championship
was born, South's BEST, at Auburn University,
Alabama. Thirty-six teams from nine hubs in Alabama,
Georgia, Florida, Ohio, and Illinois competed. Texas
BEST featured 60 teams from 17 hubs in five states.
In 2004, three new hubs joined BEST: Philadelphia
BEST, based in the Philadelphia City School System;
Coastal Bend BEST, based at Texas A&M
University-Corpus Christi; and Azalea City BEST,
based at the University of South Alabama in Mobile.
Also in 2004, Alabama BEST relocated from Auburn
University to Huntingdon College in Montgomery.
In 2005, two new hubs joined the program: Bulldog
BEST at Mississippi State University in Starkville
and Billiken BEST at St. Louis University. A third
regional championship was added: Frontier Trails
BEST at the University of Arkansas-Ft. Smith.
In 2006, four new hubs joined BEST: Music City
BEST at Lipscomb University in Nashville;
Connecticut BEST at Central Connecticut State
University; Crowley's Ridge BEST at Arkansas State
University in Jonesboro; and Northark BEST, which is
at Northark College in Harrison, Arkansas. Azalea
City BEST in Mobile changed its name to Jubilee BEST
and its affiliation with The University of South
Alabama.
In 2007, even more new hubs have joined the BEST
family: Bison BEST at North Dakota State University
in Fargo, Emerald Coast BEST at the University of
West Florida in Pensacola; Mid-South BEST at
Mid-South Community College in West Memphis, AR; and
Rio Grande Valley BEST at the University of
Texas-Pan American in Edinburg.
It appears that each year, more and more
schools/colleges of engineering or engineering
technology along with their counterparts in science
and math are starting BEST hubs. They recognize the
program as a great recruiting tool.